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the carolina watchman vol xvin.-third series salisbury n c thursday march 3 1887 no 19 the president sustained from xews-observer feb 2uth the federal house very properly by j a vote of llo to 125 refused to pass the , pauper pension bill over the veto of the resident that bill was a most in iquitous measure denounced by almost the entire press of the country as a simple raid upon the treasury and op ,, ed wen by yankee veterans them selves it would have taken millions the number of which no man has been able to calculate from the public purse and would have offered a standing re ward for perjury to every man who was in any way however remote connected with the federal army during the war j it wiis an outrage perpetrated upon the people and when our 1 lemocratic exec utive put his i wn upon it.be did a noble br tve and patriotic deed he deserves the heartfelt thanks of everv peison in the land for his manli in this matter and brave gen bragg of wisconsin with the scars of many battles upon him deserves the earnest than of everv citizen for his tificent upholding of the presi dent's devotion to duty i^^tvurgtwoim i â– â€” iii.^mmw a j unfailing specific for liver disease ollvir lujtia mouth tongue i-oatoii whiteoreo â– ed v l . t 1 n w n i ir pain in the back side **, or ji ints t.t'ti n mistaken lor rheumatism miiir stomach loss of appetite sometimes nausea and water brash or ind i restion ; flatulency and acid eructations bowels alternately costive and lax ; headache ; lossol memory with a painful sensation of having failed to do sotnethiuk which ought to havi heen done debility low spirits a ih ek yellow stp jiearance ol the skin and eyes i dry cough fever restlessness the urine is scanty and high colore i and ii allowed to simmonsliverregulatoe purely vegetable ik generally u cl in the soulh to arouse the torpid liver to a healthy action ii acts with extraordinary efficacy on tho tiver j^jdweys j t ano bowels an effi : m malaria bowel complaints l>yc|>t*psi;i sick hÂ«*)ulurhe constipation biliousness kidney affections jaundice mental depression colic endorsed by the use f 7 millions i b tile ti the best fas^ly 8edsg!fÂ«e fur children for adults an i ft ti \ -' â– â– only genuime has our z stamp i ; wi p i i j h zeilin & co philadelphia pa solu pkoi-kistoks 1'rice sl.oo i Â£ fledmont wagon j hisdi at hickory n g can't be beat - they stand where 1 thoy ought to right ijii.-ii atthefr2nt it was a hard fight but they have won it ! just read what people say about them and it you want a wagon come quickly and l>uy one either for cash or on time tsnri'y \. ( '. sc pi 1st lss>6 t â– '. i yeat . . i lion lit a very ii.ji : vo huf-e pie linnnt wan on nl tin anvn .].,,, a b ivden i it ncai'v all the time since havi i i-rely in liaulnio saw logts anil other heavy loads an.l have tint , hail tci jia . one cent tor rep ir 1 look ! upon the pie inmnt wajrun as the hest tliini . ide skein w a l;c hi iinule in the diked states the timber used in tin m i most exei am ; i nsoin 1 l'i iinkh p thomason s ll ipbl'ry n c aug 7th 1-m abott ears uiro 1 lion-ht nf jno a buj ji â€¢ piedmont wagon which tnd no pai t of it ' and consequent ly it h c hiiiy or repairs john i 1 1 km v s i.i-i:rt:v n ('. sept :; i ls-r eighteen months ago i bought ol john a li lydeii a 2 inch thimble skein pied j u tgon and h ive used it pretty ninth till the i tin i - proved to be a lir-t : j aboul it has iven ' tiwaj â€¢ ne ii i i required nn re ' i'ti t a walton p i-iai;v x ( '. s.-pt 8ih i8hg mths a i 1 li mulit ut thn aireut in iry a m in thimble skein piedmont wagon their liglites one horse warion i ve kepi it iu almost constant use and during the time li ive hauled on it at lea-t ivoo.l uni that iv il houi an â€¢ â– '- _< 'â– r i i waj.to.v here is truth if all men were equal in regard to wealth there would be difference to morrow if all the money in the world were distributed in equal share one man would be extravagant and anoth er careful one would be indolent and another industrious so that the next day some would he comparatively poor and other rich until god makes all peoples brains and bodily health just alike there will always be men of iow and men of high degress hence equality of fortune or pos sessions i*an impossibility in the very nature of man and was never intended by god who created him the inequality of taxation ed slur having read in your pa per an article from the raleigh chron icle headed a most important bill in which attention is called to the in justice in one or two cases in our pres ent state revenue law for instance - 1 a has solvent credits amounting to st ood and is allowed to deduct from same his debts say so 1 ", and therefore lists for taxation only 500 while b who owns a farm valued at 1,000 has list the same at its m value of 1,000 and c who holds the mortgage on b's 1 property for 1,000 has to list it also as ti solvent credit in other words this same thousand dollars pays what may be called a double tax is there any more injustice and ine quality ill these two cases mentioned ; t han in the case of our merchants who i in january and july pay schedule 15 | taxes on till purchases made for the six months proceeding and then in april have to again list these same j goods as stock on hand ? the mer 1 chant has also to pay in january and july fee amounting to to cents for the privilege yon may say of listing : their taxes and if under i he same roof thev sell goods and do a commis sion business they have to pay in each case fees to the sheriff and register and â– wholesale and re ail liquor dealers pay these fees to the sheriff an 1 register four times a year justice or the watchman has the bottom fallen out ? a fanner in town saturday expresses the belief that the bottom has fallen i out of rowan as an agricultural sec tion and that if he could he intended ; to pull up stakes and drive out to a fresh country when men once reavh this convic tion it is evident that they can never : be successful here while it holds them and thev had better go than stay faith is an essential elein tit to success and without it no one can put fourth the necessary effort to gam it men ; must believe thai t heir labor will be ; rewarded or they cannot or will not i make them if going to a fresh conn will re-kindle faith and courage and these are fortified with vigorous and unremitting labor wisely directed with the practice of economy success will come but the removal i itself with out these essential conditions will sure i ly fail s that after all it is not the fresh country that warrant success but the change in the individual and his methods of business such a i change could it be wrought without i the removal would doubtless be accom panied hy as good or better results for ! there is an abundance of productive soil ; in rowan awaiting intelligent industry to bring out it wealth much of the i land is badly worn but it can be more j easily and cheaply restore to fertility ' them lands can be cleared and broughl into cultivation or fresh lands in the j west reached and kiibdued to the plow [ and made \ ield their increase such is the opinion of practical men and those 1 who have spent time and means in re ! moving from place to place never theless if those who wan to go can't res on anv evidence but that of actual experience let their friends bid them an affectionate good bye charging them in the last loving words to re member thai there is more depending on the titan than in the place he casts his lot lor t he success he craves p p frofitable farming in the south we very often hear lhat farming in the south is not a profitable business that the lands are poor that farmers are getting more and more into debt and that on the whole the outlook for the fanning interests of that suction is by no means flattering there is un doubtedly a grain of truth in these statements but if we examing the facts we will find that there an two main reasons why farmers in the south tire not more prosperous one is that they adhere too closely to the one-crop idea and no agricultural country can be per manently prosperous where all atten tion is given to one crop whether that crop be cotton tobacco or wheat i)i versity is essential to prosperity in ag riculture as well as in manufactures another n a ion for the unprofitableness of many farms in the south is the lack of proper cultivation instead of deep ploughing the land i merely scratched on the top the value of thorough cultivation or as it is now known in the south intensive farming has been most clearly broughl out in geor gia during the last two years a few near ago i prominent fertilizer uianu frcturing house of atlanta offered pre miums for the best yields of corn and cm ton on one acre and on five acres fronj the constitution of that city we gather tho following facts as to thi re sults of this offer during 1883 und 188g the crops made by the four leading contestants for 1880 were as foil ws four georgia farmers in 1885 made 00 laics cotton on twenty acres an aver erage of 'â– '>}, hales of 430 pound seach to the acre each planted five acres in contest for ihe premiums for 1885 lbs lint fertilizer cotton name post-office used lbs aaere.s geo y tuitt - - la grange - - f.guo t.sus dan ii ponder - hampton - - - 3.500 t.">57 c m davis&son - pope's ferry 2,000 7,544 it w terry pairburn - - - 1,500 u.k77 total en ii acres - - 10,000 ja.ste average per acre 5:10 pounds of fertilizer 1 4n pounds i.t lint cotton this was accepted as a remarkable result and the hundred fanners who j assembled in the agricultural depart ment agreed that it could never be beat en a yield of i0 hales of cotton on 20 acres broke the record and establish ed what was considered the limit for the future hut here are figures for , the contest in 1886 hour georgiii fanner in 18s6 made 82 bales of cotton on 20 acres lbs lint fertilizer cotton same post-office used lbs 5 acres 1 j sims - - hogansville - - 2,000 io.s87 r g kay - - palmetto - - - - 2.000 in sin m ('. l'.i-im - palmetto i,200 in 7 geo w.truitt - la grange - 7,550 8,833 total mi in acres - - - 15.350 41.37.2 average per acrs 7(57 pounds of fertilizer l.'.ie.x pounds of lint cotton it will be seen that the averaging figures for 1885 are surpassed the i'll 1 , bales made on 20 acres in 8g has i grown to 92 hales on 2 acres in is86 ; or nearly fives bales to the acre this result is remarkable there were per haps two hundred contestants for each year scattered over the three states id alabama georgia and carolina ihe average yield of these two hundred j farmers for 85 was 7:52 pounds of lint cotton to the acre or more than 1 .', hales the average yield of the two i hundred farmer contestants lor mi was tin pounds lint cotton to the acre or considerably o er two bales these figures the constitution says teach several things 1st that the amount of fertilizer nded ed to achieve this result is small mr sims with one ton of fertilizer on live acre raised lo,ss7 pounds of cotton it cost him 30 le fertilize liis five acres ami he took off of them 902 worth of lint cotton about the same result was achieved hy messrs ray and pyron ' mr truitt who look the first premium | year before last put nearly four tons ofl fertilizer on his live acres lasl vear hut j did not reach as jrooct a result hy 2,000 pounds of cotton as mr sims who used only cm ton of l'eri ilizer l'"nd these results do not depend upon locality more them two hundred farm ers contested these farmers were seat 1 tered throughout three states they -, averaged over two bales to the acre on j five acre patches this demonstrates that the average lands throughol the south taken anywhere and properly treated will produce two bales of cotton to the acre instead of one bale to three acres as is now the average it shows also that no man has a patent on the process but thai out of two hundred farmers who tried it the entire number averaged over two hales to the acre the result in coin planting is quite as remarkable in 1s85 then were a imn dred georgia farmers who coutested for corn premiums the entire acreage planted by three hundred farmers aver aged sl bushels of shelled corn to the acre in s"i in 1886 a larger number contested and the average was advanced from sl bushels of shelled corn to the acre to 102 bushels r l'he single acre premium was taken by a farmer win raised 1(5-1 bushels ol helled corn tie si lads ami liuitres cannot he misim | iii stood the pro c thai there is no bet j ter arm i ni hind mi earth than in georgia j a luhiima nnd carolina they prove that j any man w ho tn its his land light will be i enriched by its product they prove lhat j intensive fu rii)im i the proper met iuui of farming and that it is cheaper lo cultivate it small farm well ihan to scratch the sur face of a large plantation the prove thai a man b inteili ence and prudent out a can get from live acres a inti'-h cotton as be has be n accustomed to net i'rom six t acres and that : in est of cultivation is ven much less l making five acres give i him the cotton lhat fifty acres formerly gave he can put y acres down to grass oi in other e:,.ps making enough to support i him and his lamil the ear t h rough on t lie i five acres intensive i \ i icicd 1 h u is m ! bi ! ter emu i ry in i he w irbl than georgia | and the adj lining slates and no better and | safer and more piotiia-'ie business than a nn i nir it a man will mix a little brain j with ins hauls when he goes lo till the c i i the new county hobby in the legislature we are glad to note the fact that the house commit tee on propositions and grievances re ported unfavorably as to the formation of a new count v from portions of ire doll rowan and mecklenburg this mania for axe grinding is on the in crease and is becoming a rather costly amusement out of the many propo sitions and schemes we much doubt if there is one that is really needed there seems to be two ideas uppermost in in such scheme first to create offices ami get a high price for town lots and second to prevent the necessity of any one having to attend court who lives more teu miles from a county seat when samuel h udn's n grandfa'her of chief justice henderson and his emi nent brother archibald of salisbury i was high sheriff of granville liis field of labor embraced the present county vance warren franklin person and we believe a part of orange he used to serve prcessea of law by walking in those days the first court house for the county was on roanoke river in the first william eaton's barn he was grandfather of the late well known lawyer of warren of the same name people would have to ride horseback full seventy miles or more to get to court now there must be a court house jail and poor house and a do/en paid officials for every ten square miles or there is a grievance there are if counties now they are more than sufficient unless they were better dis tributed as to lines and geographical formation let there be no more re publican counties created by demo cratic blundering â€” wil.'stftr the earthquake southern europe shakes ltpâ€”hun dreds of people killed london feb 24 â€” further dispatch es concerningtheeaithquakes in south ern europe state that although there have been no further shocks at nice the panic has not yet subsided and fu gitives are flying in every direction the people are atraid to re-enter their houses last evening the heights back of the city were crowded with refugees two thousand english american and russian visitors camped out during the night on the elevated ground six thousand persons have left the city for paris the son of mr albert n hath wav tin american consul at x ice was seriously injured tin-re have been no further disturb ances at monte carlo the place is till ed with thousands of refugees from connor nice men teal and san ltemo it is difficult to tind shelt r for a great number of the people and last night a great many of them were compelhd to camp out a inure confident feeling prevails to-day graining is being sus pended and the hand is playing on the terrace for the purpose of restoring confidence to the frightened people another shock wiis felt at men tone today it was so severe that houses were shaken but no one was injured additional details concerning the dam age dune by yesterday's shocks show that in some cases where the villiages were built on mountain sides were top pling into the valleys three railway trains have been despatched with fond for the sufferers a number of soldiers have also been sent to assist them rome february 24 detail were received this morning of the results of the earthquakes yesterday showing that the effects are far more serious than w;is thought the loss of life and the destruction of property is learn ed to have been terrible most start ; ling news comes from genolse riveiera \ over fifteen hundred people were killed in that district at the village of ba li ardo situated at the top nf a hill a number of itihobitants took refuge in ; a church when the shocks were first : felt the subsequent and greater shock demolished the church and three hun i died of the people who were in it were i killed the destruction of property in t he sections of italy visited hy the earth quakes was immense and widespread paris feb 24 i p m a renew of earthquake shucks has occurred in ' the southern section of prance ter rible disaster is momentarily expected '. nue cannes and mentore are half de serted fears are expressed for the safety of prince of wales and the < r lean i princes all of whom are in the the section of country where the earth quakes prevail the fisheries trouble has assumed the importance of a national question and the congress is so dealing with it the lio'.ise with but one dis-e ting voice passed a bill to extend the retalia tory bill of the senate and to prevent canadian oars and locomotives from entering the united states there is no passion or vindictiveness but an as serting of rights and dignity in n be coming way england would do well to take notice and govern herself ac eordingiv no american wishes war with any country and especially with mother country england but all amer icans would like for outrages to stop and for the honor and rights of the united states to be amply protected a gainsl hggression and insult if star rev dr charles w ward rector of st paul's episcopal church engle wood n j shot his wife then fired two shots iti his daughter and then shot himself neither his wife nor himself is dangerously wounded he is believed to be insane or was when he perpetrated the assault ii the conduct of the wife on the ore - siou lying on the sofa with her face to the wall hearing her husband calling her without answering and finally when he said answer me while i count tive or i wiil shoot you was strange if she thought he was either drunk or j crazy evidntly she did not believe he ! would shoot or if she did for some re son she was willing to be sin ' a gr.at mystery * if there is anything we know less about than we think we do it is the girl and of this the girl is glad for there is nothing she hates to be known so had as the truth she will wear out two old dresses running around to find oui how tn make a new one in the latest style sh will greet you with the most bewitching smile and laugh at yonr stupidness when you are gone she will walk two or three blocks out of the way to get a peer at her beau and then pass by without looking at him she will attend church listen with absorbed interest to the eloquent and pathetic sermons then return home and expatiate upon the horrible tit of miss snow's new basque from the time she is big enough to swing on the gate and tie a ribbon in a double bow knot she begins to locate a sweet \ heart and she keeps this up until he is located in the hack yard exercising his talents dissecting stovewood â€” castrtr rille ( rex an rill e a real joint snake dr fitzgerald editor of the nash ville christian advocate i have read with much interest the page of nat ural history in the christian advocate and 1 now want to add to the number of curious things by contributing mv ; mite as i was plowing yesterday a piece of new ground near the woods 1 plowed out two joint snakes the first one i wounded and as it was cold and 1 could not crawl fast 1 put my foot on its tail and rolled it a little it un join ted about ten inches of its tail 1 pick ed it up and took it to three persons j near by and unjointed it again by bending it so that they could see the joints unfastened so they sh mid see and believe what so many think is only a myth a real joint snake the ! head part of that snake crawled away â– and near by 1 plowed out another : and reaching down quickly seized it ! by its head to prevent its unjointing for if you catch one by its tail it will leave a part of itself in your hand and i slip oil with the other a means of de 'â– tense with which it is endowed to evade its enemies the snake is about j two feet long and resembles a garter snake only it has no neck its head : seems to be on the thickest part of its body it has brown black stripes and specks on its sides and white bel ly if ynu know of any museum at tached to any of our colleges or in vanderbnilt university where they would like to have it and they will pay express charges on it i will send it to them let us hear frnm them right off ts i em't feed it well and i suppose it is getting hungry having heen a month or two laying up for winter address i'n r im i jackson aubnrndale poll county florida it will puzzle the court har.l'ord teh-ram ( hie of the most novel eases thai has ever occurred in the history of the courts i about to be brought in a tow u situated only a few miles from hurt ford six year ago a gentleman of re spectable character and whu moves in the hest society obtained a divorce i'rom his wile on the ground of adultly i'he case attracted wide attention tit the time on account of t lie re p â– : tbilih of the parti *- concerned although the divorce was granted the parents of the young woman have always maini tained thai theirdaughter was innocent and although the divorce to k from hei i iie right fo bear her husband's nam â– . they have . i ways iii isted thai sin could be known by no oi her less than a year ago the woman died it is s.ud of a broken heart and on her deathbed maintained that she had nev er in en guilty of the crime charged by her husband her body was laid away in the churchyard and a neat bin mod est gravestone mark's her resting place i fait ii i'n 1 to their belief the parents cans j ed the inscription on th â€¢ st me to bear | the name of their daughter's husband i and this h;is caused the suit the man is about to bring action in thecourt to i force the parents toeivase hi name from the touicstone claiming that i he was i divorced from the woman she had no â– right to bear his name even in | d ath it is doubtful if a similar case jean be found in anv state or f-ountry ts information sÂ£_$1_^Â£?%_s many persons y___^^^s t f "' s in 7 hhettmatism nsllslj^v-i^x -"'â– â€¢'â€¢'â– â– ''Â« the s2s1 ./ limbs hark nnd \. / si i,s bad ltlooil k jriiitli'./i-:tfit>ii.j)if c tprpsiii malar in , const i jirtt i uu js is id nvij t roubles j--v0lina cordial cures rheumatism bail blood anil ki inei tronilm by cleansing the bloo i of all i iiiiiiuritic -, sffonsthenlng all p-uu volina cordial cures sick-headache neuralgia tains in the limbs ba k and sides by toning the i . es i i trengthening the muscles volina cordial cures dyspepsia indi^r.=tic-m nnd constii at ion 1 j aiding 11 e assim ilating ofthe food hin ugh thej roper action of the itoinach ; it creates a healthy appetite h volina cordial cures nervousness depression r.f spirits and weakness by enliven j ing unci toning tiie fystem i â€” volina cordial cures overworked end delicate women puny and sickly children ! it is delightful and nutritious as a general ronic volina almanac and i'iary ***____&_ i for 1 â– ;*-::. - jb i and useful book tellinghowto ccre ttm vs diseases nl fiome iuapli tsant natural way i mailed en receipt of a2 . postage stamp address voljna druc a chemical co 1 baltimore md u.s a it is well to remember that lift withotit lungliingisailreaiy blank that ambition i i vacnuui tlmt will never be filled that oik mistake is a warnino winch ni'i'd not be rppeated that there is joy in the evening when the day has been well spent that cheek bodily outers where mod esty dare not pull tho door bell that xow is the constant watchword ticking from tli cluck of time that the wear and tear of life come chiefly by straining after the im possible that the great secret of success in life is to im ready when opportunity j gomes that i can't doit never did any thing and that i will try has wink ed wonders j that one broach of faith will til ways lie remembered no matter how loyal your subsequent life may he that a face that cannot smile is like a hud that bjossoms and dies upon the stalk that a watch sot right mav be a true guide to many others and one that i irons wrong may be the moans of mis leading a whole neighborhood that a well-cooked breakfast will do more towards preserving peace in tho family than scores of mottoes set in must elaborate mouldings what makes a man what makes the man is his charac ter and not his appearance nor any thing external the poet burns who w;is walking in edinburg with a fash ionable young man met and spoke too . : worthy but plainly dressed farmer i when his companion blamed him the i poet replied why it was not the rough coal that i spoke to bid the man thai was 1 in it and the man sir for true worth i would weigh down yoti and tne and \ ten more such anv dav . ' it is the character that makes the i man and the character i always being : shaped by tho daily thought and ac tions every boy is building up da by day the character that will make or mar his manhood exchange â€”<_.- â€” the goose bone's prophecy i i ..... " i mt may depend upon it said a rockland county fanner to a reporter hist week we will have an open win ter and a good wheat year the goose | bone says so the goose bone is ac i cepted by timn rockland county ]",; - ple as better authority than wml;i:i or their hackensa<-k friend de vi e in many farm houses it will soon 'â– â– â– â€¢â– found hanging in the hall and upon its predictions sumo men dace the fullest reliance the real prophetic bone it is claimed | can only bo obtained from a go se that i was hatched out in the spring and the goose must not be killed until tin in dian - immer lias p issed away a bom taken from a goose liati hed in mn last year has a row of dots around the chronic catarrh catar.t ilcstroys the sense of smi i nnd 1 usually tho result of i neglected cold taste consumes the cartilages of the nose in the head which causes an inllam and unless properly treated hastens i mation of the mucous meinhranc of the victim into consumption it usually iil-|nose unless arrested this inflammation dicates a scrofulous condition of tlie sys produces < atarrh which when chronic tem and should be treated like chronic becomes very offensive it is impossible ulcers and eruptions through the blood to be otherwise healthy and it the the most obstinate and dangerous forms same time afflicted with catarrh when of this disagreeable disi ase promptly treati d this disi aa ma be can be cured cured bv 1 kin ycr"s sar*npnriiin i : v the u â– of iyer's - i imvu ahvavs bti-n mon or less troubled suffered 1 . , from chronic catarrh with scrofula but n r seriously until m . v is verv poor md i felt thr spi in . i 1 â€¢-. at that time took a miserably none of tlie remedies i took severe cold in my head which notwith i horded me an relief until i commenced standing all eflbr - lo cure grew worse using awr's sarsaparilla of which i and tinallv became i chronic catarrh have now taken live bottles the catarrh . it was accompanied with terrible head has disappeared nnd i aili growing aches deafness a continual couching and strong and stout ngain my appetite ha with great soreness of the lungs my returned and my h alih i full restored throat and stomaeh were so polluted witfi u>an l v cook â€¢â€¢> aibaiij street the mass of corruption from my head boston highlands mass thai loss.of appetite dyspepsia and i w as troubled with catarrh and nil its emaciation totally unlitted me for 1 im httendrint evils for several vears iiii.il uess 1 tried many ol tin so-called sj - ., ,,,,,.. remedies and was treated bv cilies for this disease but obtained no ., number 0 f phvsieians but received relief until 1 commenced taking ami ,, , u il ,;, n ;| i commenced taking sarsaparilla after using two bottles of \- â€¢. - . . \ f,.\v b i 1 1 of this medicine i noticed an improvement thin medicine cured me of this trouble in mv condition when i had taken six â€ž, ,..,,. , | completely restored bottles all traces of catarrh disappeared ,â€ž, n ,. ; , , . r n_'th .(,.:â€žâ€¢ boggs aud my health was eompli tely restored hainan's mi :-. alb . marie n < '. a i < orm ii fairfield iowa f ym ,. inm â€ž,.,â€ž â€ž |( . n , md j nv j kora , e for thorowrhlv i radicating the poisons â– nur system more rapidly and surely than Â«. i ( atari h from the blood take b any othi r un divine use ayer's s:ir ayer's sar saparilla papnrilla it will restore health and visor it is the safesl mid mwt reliable of all to decaving ami diseased tissues when bl i purifiers no other remedi is so everything else fails effective incases of chronic catarrh prepared by dr j c ayer co , i owell ma sold bi ill druggibts price 1 ; eu boulen Â»Â»â€¢ â– - y ? â€” â€” am â€” f.r c flÂ«'w r ._ toba^s 1 i^a_ac^v"f m . â€”Â«___â€” | eczema eradicated 3 gentlemen it is dm â€¢ â– ' '' tl ii 'â€¢'. 1 ---â€¢.. â€¢ r -â€¢ i af â€¢ having i taken - . .'.â€¢-.. i â– ....... 1 ".' ml i 3i ae novel rei iirned s s s r â€¢ â– my and i ot well it â€¢ '-Â» 'â€¢"â– ":â€¢ 'â– â– mv wife greatly in caw ' - .-...â– ..- " â€¢ â€¢ '. cure of a breaking out on m i-ttl three i ..- < . . â€¢. . i . watkinsvillc i â– â€¢.., feb : :, 13 v jaaiiij \. . . l is l treatise on blooa and skin di eascmail d fr ta swiri srrnnrr r - ' v'tin'-i l b bbaaa>i.'iavijbffw!ujj jui.ti.imii a'm!Â»1"w*-Â«i u t > <â€” >> â– â– â– â€”*.â€”â– â€”â€”â– â€”â– keel of it indicating the temperature and the darker the spots the i ohh r the weather it is claimed thai the marls dividing the bone indicate the time winter months 1 eenil er hegiui ing at the ir mt those who have read i his year's bone carefully say it indi cates more regular weather than that of last year and not so severe there will not lie many days during v hich running water will ir / â€¢. the cold est weather will occur during the first half of january and in thai time there wiil he several days of freezing it will be the severest part of the whole season near the pi ini of the bone , the discoloration is a little heavy thus showing that the first day of winter j will give proof of the season's change ! 1 his will be followed by rising temper hit ure and falling weather for christ ' nuts january will be ushered in with cold , and the cold will strengthen as the i days lengthen the coldest day of the winter being jan 8 the severe weath er will he brief followed by rising temperatures and heavy thaws and the last half of the month will see numv rains and snows during february there will not be any very cold weath er but it will be a rather disagreeable month with snows and rains a few cold days will he all that february will contribute to wittier an early and de cided thaw is among the promises of the bone the february thaw will overflow the mountain streams and disastrous floods may be looked for - a i w york tribune evangelical frauds columbia s c feb 24 ten days ago two men and a woman represent ing themselves as homeless evangelists from canada came here and began ureai hing upon the street corners the whites did not attend but several hun dred colored folks went to the preach ing and the meeting was quite excit ing the visitor at fi-rt preached religion m a fanatical manner abusing all pastors t churches and declaring that tiio.e who attended indoor servi ces were going to hell l'la world was to come to an end in a few years when all outdoor worshippers number ing one hundred and forty-four thous and would be taken to heaven alive the wih talks of these white people made some of the negroes almost wild with religious excitement it was ascertained to-day that these people are going about among the ne ; groes and ;.; tempting to set them against the white by assuring them | that i lie whites are leading them tinder foot usurping their rights cheating them v . the holiness evangelists should he threatened with a thrashing and tar and feathers if thev don't desist they have disappeared it is supposed that they are supported by some oi ganization in the noith desiring the colored people and the whites to disa gree they ask for no money and take none but draw on new york for large sums al a t ime

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the carolina watchman vol xvin.-third series salisbury n c thursday march 3 1887 no 19 the president sustained from xews-observer feb 2uth the federal house very properly by j a vote of llo to 125 refused to pass the , pauper pension bill over the veto of the resident that bill was a most in iquitous measure denounced by almost the entire press of the country as a simple raid upon the treasury and op ,, ed wen by yankee veterans them selves it would have taken millions the number of which no man has been able to calculate from the public purse and would have offered a standing re ward for perjury to every man who was in any way however remote connected with the federal army during the war j it wiis an outrage perpetrated upon the people and when our 1 lemocratic exec utive put his i wn upon it.be did a noble br tve and patriotic deed he deserves the heartfelt thanks of everv peison in the land for his manli in this matter and brave gen bragg of wisconsin with the scars of many battles upon him deserves the earnest than of everv citizen for his tificent upholding of the presi dent's devotion to duty i^^tvurgtwoim i â– â€” iii.^mmw a j unfailing specific for liver disease ollvir lujtia mouth tongue i-oatoii whiteoreo â– ed v l . t 1 n w n i ir pain in the back side **, or ji ints t.t'ti n mistaken lor rheumatism miiir stomach loss of appetite sometimes nausea and water brash or ind i restion ; flatulency and acid eructations bowels alternately costive and lax ; headache ; lossol memory with a painful sensation of having failed to do sotnethiuk which ought to havi heen done debility low spirits a ih ek yellow stp jiearance ol the skin and eyes i dry cough fever restlessness the urine is scanty and high colore i and ii allowed to simmonsliverregulatoe purely vegetable ik generally u cl in the soulh to arouse the torpid liver to a healthy action ii acts with extraordinary efficacy on tho tiver j^jdweys j t ano bowels an effi : m malaria bowel complaints l>yc|>t*psi;i sick hÂ«*)ulurhe constipation biliousness kidney affections jaundice mental depression colic endorsed by the use f 7 millions i b tile ti the best fas^ly 8edsg!fÂ«e fur children for adults an i ft ti \ -' â– â– only genuime has our z stamp i ; wi p i i j h zeilin & co philadelphia pa solu pkoi-kistoks 1'rice sl.oo i Â£ fledmont wagon j hisdi at hickory n g can't be beat - they stand where 1 thoy ought to right ijii.-ii atthefr2nt it was a hard fight but they have won it ! just read what people say about them and it you want a wagon come quickly and l>uy one either for cash or on time tsnri'y \. ( '. sc pi 1st lss>6 t â– '. i yeat . . i lion lit a very ii.ji : vo huf-e pie linnnt wan on nl tin anvn .].,,, a b ivden i it ncai'v all the time since havi i i-rely in liaulnio saw logts anil other heavy loads an.l have tint , hail tci jia . one cent tor rep ir 1 look ! upon the pie inmnt wajrun as the hest tliini . ide skein w a l;c hi iinule in the diked states the timber used in tin m i most exei am ; i nsoin 1 l'i iinkh p thomason s ll ipbl'ry n c aug 7th 1-m abott ears uiro 1 lion-ht nf jno a buj ji â€¢ piedmont wagon which tnd no pai t of it ' and consequent ly it h c hiiiy or repairs john i 1 1 km v s i.i-i:rt:v n ('. sept :; i ls-r eighteen months ago i bought ol john a li lydeii a 2 inch thimble skein pied j u tgon and h ive used it pretty ninth till the i tin i - proved to be a lir-t : j aboul it has iven ' tiwaj â€¢ ne ii i i required nn re ' i'ti t a walton p i-iai;v x ( '. s.-pt 8ih i8hg mths a i 1 li mulit ut thn aireut in iry a m in thimble skein piedmont wagon their liglites one horse warion i ve kepi it iu almost constant use and during the time li ive hauled on it at lea-t ivoo.l uni that iv il houi an â€¢ â– '- _< 'â– r i i waj.to.v here is truth if all men were equal in regard to wealth there would be difference to morrow if all the money in the world were distributed in equal share one man would be extravagant and anoth er careful one would be indolent and another industrious so that the next day some would he comparatively poor and other rich until god makes all peoples brains and bodily health just alike there will always be men of iow and men of high degress hence equality of fortune or pos sessions i*an impossibility in the very nature of man and was never intended by god who created him the inequality of taxation ed slur having read in your pa per an article from the raleigh chron icle headed a most important bill in which attention is called to the in justice in one or two cases in our pres ent state revenue law for instance - 1 a has solvent credits amounting to st ood and is allowed to deduct from same his debts say so 1 ", and therefore lists for taxation only 500 while b who owns a farm valued at 1,000 has list the same at its m value of 1,000 and c who holds the mortgage on b's 1 property for 1,000 has to list it also as ti solvent credit in other words this same thousand dollars pays what may be called a double tax is there any more injustice and ine quality ill these two cases mentioned ; t han in the case of our merchants who i in january and july pay schedule 15 | taxes on till purchases made for the six months proceeding and then in april have to again list these same j goods as stock on hand ? the mer 1 chant has also to pay in january and july fee amounting to to cents for the privilege yon may say of listing : their taxes and if under i he same roof thev sell goods and do a commis sion business they have to pay in each case fees to the sheriff and register and â– wholesale and re ail liquor dealers pay these fees to the sheriff an 1 register four times a year justice or the watchman has the bottom fallen out ? a fanner in town saturday expresses the belief that the bottom has fallen i out of rowan as an agricultural sec tion and that if he could he intended ; to pull up stakes and drive out to a fresh country when men once reavh this convic tion it is evident that they can never : be successful here while it holds them and thev had better go than stay faith is an essential elein tit to success and without it no one can put fourth the necessary effort to gam it men ; must believe thai t heir labor will be ; rewarded or they cannot or will not i make them if going to a fresh conn will re-kindle faith and courage and these are fortified with vigorous and unremitting labor wisely directed with the practice of economy success will come but the removal i itself with out these essential conditions will sure i ly fail s that after all it is not the fresh country that warrant success but the change in the individual and his methods of business such a i change could it be wrought without i the removal would doubtless be accom panied hy as good or better results for ! there is an abundance of productive soil ; in rowan awaiting intelligent industry to bring out it wealth much of the i land is badly worn but it can be more j easily and cheaply restore to fertility ' them lands can be cleared and broughl into cultivation or fresh lands in the j west reached and kiibdued to the plow [ and made \ ield their increase such is the opinion of practical men and those 1 who have spent time and means in re ! moving from place to place never theless if those who wan to go can't res on anv evidence but that of actual experience let their friends bid them an affectionate good bye charging them in the last loving words to re member thai there is more depending on the titan than in the place he casts his lot lor t he success he craves p p frofitable farming in the south we very often hear lhat farming in the south is not a profitable business that the lands are poor that farmers are getting more and more into debt and that on the whole the outlook for the fanning interests of that suction is by no means flattering there is un doubtedly a grain of truth in these statements but if we examing the facts we will find that there an two main reasons why farmers in the south tire not more prosperous one is that they adhere too closely to the one-crop idea and no agricultural country can be per manently prosperous where all atten tion is given to one crop whether that crop be cotton tobacco or wheat i)i versity is essential to prosperity in ag riculture as well as in manufactures another n a ion for the unprofitableness of many farms in the south is the lack of proper cultivation instead of deep ploughing the land i merely scratched on the top the value of thorough cultivation or as it is now known in the south intensive farming has been most clearly broughl out in geor gia during the last two years a few near ago i prominent fertilizer uianu frcturing house of atlanta offered pre miums for the best yields of corn and cm ton on one acre and on five acres fronj the constitution of that city we gather tho following facts as to thi re sults of this offer during 1883 und 188g the crops made by the four leading contestants for 1880 were as foil ws four georgia farmers in 1885 made 00 laics cotton on twenty acres an aver erage of 'â– '>}, hales of 430 pound seach to the acre each planted five acres in contest for ihe premiums for 1885 lbs lint fertilizer cotton name post-office used lbs aaere.s geo y tuitt - - la grange - - f.guo t.sus dan ii ponder - hampton - - - 3.500 t.">57 c m davis&son - pope's ferry 2,000 7,544 it w terry pairburn - - - 1,500 u.k77 total en ii acres - - 10,000 ja.ste average per acre 5:10 pounds of fertilizer 1 4n pounds i.t lint cotton this was accepted as a remarkable result and the hundred fanners who j assembled in the agricultural depart ment agreed that it could never be beat en a yield of i0 hales of cotton on 20 acres broke the record and establish ed what was considered the limit for the future hut here are figures for , the contest in 1886 hour georgiii fanner in 18s6 made 82 bales of cotton on 20 acres lbs lint fertilizer cotton same post-office used lbs 5 acres 1 j sims - - hogansville - - 2,000 io.s87 r g kay - - palmetto - - - - 2.000 in sin m ('. l'.i-im - palmetto i,200 in 7 geo w.truitt - la grange - 7,550 8,833 total mi in acres - - - 15.350 41.37.2 average per acrs 7(57 pounds of fertilizer l.'.ie.x pounds of lint cotton it will be seen that the averaging figures for 1885 are surpassed the i'll 1 , bales made on 20 acres in 8g has i grown to 92 hales on 2 acres in is86 ; or nearly fives bales to the acre this result is remarkable there were per haps two hundred contestants for each year scattered over the three states id alabama georgia and carolina ihe average yield of these two hundred j farmers for 85 was 7:52 pounds of lint cotton to the acre or more than 1 .', hales the average yield of the two i hundred farmer contestants lor mi was tin pounds lint cotton to the acre or considerably o er two bales these figures the constitution says teach several things 1st that the amount of fertilizer nded ed to achieve this result is small mr sims with one ton of fertilizer on live acre raised lo,ss7 pounds of cotton it cost him 30 le fertilize liis five acres ami he took off of them 902 worth of lint cotton about the same result was achieved hy messrs ray and pyron ' mr truitt who look the first premium | year before last put nearly four tons ofl fertilizer on his live acres lasl vear hut j did not reach as jrooct a result hy 2,000 pounds of cotton as mr sims who used only cm ton of l'eri ilizer l'"nd these results do not depend upon locality more them two hundred farm ers contested these farmers were seat 1 tered throughout three states they -, averaged over two bales to the acre on j five acre patches this demonstrates that the average lands throughol the south taken anywhere and properly treated will produce two bales of cotton to the acre instead of one bale to three acres as is now the average it shows also that no man has a patent on the process but thai out of two hundred farmers who tried it the entire number averaged over two hales to the acre the result in coin planting is quite as remarkable in 1s85 then were a imn dred georgia farmers who coutested for corn premiums the entire acreage planted by three hundred farmers aver aged sl bushels of shelled corn to the acre in s"i in 1886 a larger number contested and the average was advanced from sl bushels of shelled corn to the acre to 102 bushels r l'he single acre premium was taken by a farmer win raised 1(5-1 bushels ol helled corn tie si lads ami liuitres cannot he misim | iii stood the pro c thai there is no bet j ter arm i ni hind mi earth than in georgia j a luhiima nnd carolina they prove that j any man w ho tn its his land light will be i enriched by its product they prove lhat j intensive fu rii)im i the proper met iuui of farming and that it is cheaper lo cultivate it small farm well ihan to scratch the sur face of a large plantation the prove thai a man b inteili ence and prudent out a can get from live acres a inti'-h cotton as be has be n accustomed to net i'rom six t acres and that : in est of cultivation is ven much less l making five acres give i him the cotton lhat fifty acres formerly gave he can put y acres down to grass oi in other e:,.ps making enough to support i him and his lamil the ear t h rough on t lie i five acres intensive i \ i icicd 1 h u is m ! bi ! ter emu i ry in i he w irbl than georgia | and the adj lining slates and no better and | safer and more piotiia-'ie business than a nn i nir it a man will mix a little brain j with ins hauls when he goes lo till the c i i the new county hobby in the legislature we are glad to note the fact that the house commit tee on propositions and grievances re ported unfavorably as to the formation of a new count v from portions of ire doll rowan and mecklenburg this mania for axe grinding is on the in crease and is becoming a rather costly amusement out of the many propo sitions and schemes we much doubt if there is one that is really needed there seems to be two ideas uppermost in in such scheme first to create offices ami get a high price for town lots and second to prevent the necessity of any one having to attend court who lives more teu miles from a county seat when samuel h udn's n grandfa'her of chief justice henderson and his emi nent brother archibald of salisbury i was high sheriff of granville liis field of labor embraced the present county vance warren franklin person and we believe a part of orange he used to serve prcessea of law by walking in those days the first court house for the county was on roanoke river in the first william eaton's barn he was grandfather of the late well known lawyer of warren of the same name people would have to ride horseback full seventy miles or more to get to court now there must be a court house jail and poor house and a do/en paid officials for every ten square miles or there is a grievance there are if counties now they are more than sufficient unless they were better dis tributed as to lines and geographical formation let there be no more re publican counties created by demo cratic blundering â€” wil.'stftr the earthquake southern europe shakes ltpâ€”hun dreds of people killed london feb 24 â€” further dispatch es concerningtheeaithquakes in south ern europe state that although there have been no further shocks at nice the panic has not yet subsided and fu gitives are flying in every direction the people are atraid to re-enter their houses last evening the heights back of the city were crowded with refugees two thousand english american and russian visitors camped out during the night on the elevated ground six thousand persons have left the city for paris the son of mr albert n hath wav tin american consul at x ice was seriously injured tin-re have been no further disturb ances at monte carlo the place is till ed with thousands of refugees from connor nice men teal and san ltemo it is difficult to tind shelt r for a great number of the people and last night a great many of them were compelhd to camp out a inure confident feeling prevails to-day graining is being sus pended and the hand is playing on the terrace for the purpose of restoring confidence to the frightened people another shock wiis felt at men tone today it was so severe that houses were shaken but no one was injured additional details concerning the dam age dune by yesterday's shocks show that in some cases where the villiages were built on mountain sides were top pling into the valleys three railway trains have been despatched with fond for the sufferers a number of soldiers have also been sent to assist them rome february 24 detail were received this morning of the results of the earthquakes yesterday showing that the effects are far more serious than w;is thought the loss of life and the destruction of property is learn ed to have been terrible most start ; ling news comes from genolse riveiera \ over fifteen hundred people were killed in that district at the village of ba li ardo situated at the top nf a hill a number of itihobitants took refuge in ; a church when the shocks were first : felt the subsequent and greater shock demolished the church and three hun i died of the people who were in it were i killed the destruction of property in t he sections of italy visited hy the earth quakes was immense and widespread paris feb 24 i p m a renew of earthquake shucks has occurred in ' the southern section of prance ter rible disaster is momentarily expected '. nue cannes and mentore are half de serted fears are expressed for the safety of prince of wales and the < r lean i princes all of whom are in the the section of country where the earth quakes prevail the fisheries trouble has assumed the importance of a national question and the congress is so dealing with it the lio'.ise with but one dis-e ting voice passed a bill to extend the retalia tory bill of the senate and to prevent canadian oars and locomotives from entering the united states there is no passion or vindictiveness but an as serting of rights and dignity in n be coming way england would do well to take notice and govern herself ac eordingiv no american wishes war with any country and especially with mother country england but all amer icans would like for outrages to stop and for the honor and rights of the united states to be amply protected a gainsl hggression and insult if star rev dr charles w ward rector of st paul's episcopal church engle wood n j shot his wife then fired two shots iti his daughter and then shot himself neither his wife nor himself is dangerously wounded he is believed to be insane or was when he perpetrated the assault ii the conduct of the wife on the ore - siou lying on the sofa with her face to the wall hearing her husband calling her without answering and finally when he said answer me while i count tive or i wiil shoot you was strange if she thought he was either drunk or j crazy evidntly she did not believe he ! would shoot or if she did for some re son she was willing to be sin ' a gr.at mystery * if there is anything we know less about than we think we do it is the girl and of this the girl is glad for there is nothing she hates to be known so had as the truth she will wear out two old dresses running around to find oui how tn make a new one in the latest style sh will greet you with the most bewitching smile and laugh at yonr stupidness when you are gone she will walk two or three blocks out of the way to get a peer at her beau and then pass by without looking at him she will attend church listen with absorbed interest to the eloquent and pathetic sermons then return home and expatiate upon the horrible tit of miss snow's new basque from the time she is big enough to swing on the gate and tie a ribbon in a double bow knot she begins to locate a sweet \ heart and she keeps this up until he is located in the hack yard exercising his talents dissecting stovewood â€” castrtr rille ( rex an rill e a real joint snake dr fitzgerald editor of the nash ville christian advocate i have read with much interest the page of nat ural history in the christian advocate and 1 now want to add to the number of curious things by contributing mv ; mite as i was plowing yesterday a piece of new ground near the woods 1 plowed out two joint snakes the first one i wounded and as it was cold and 1 could not crawl fast 1 put my foot on its tail and rolled it a little it un join ted about ten inches of its tail 1 pick ed it up and took it to three persons j near by and unjointed it again by bending it so that they could see the joints unfastened so they sh mid see and believe what so many think is only a myth a real joint snake the ! head part of that snake crawled away â– and near by 1 plowed out another : and reaching down quickly seized it ! by its head to prevent its unjointing for if you catch one by its tail it will leave a part of itself in your hand and i slip oil with the other a means of de 'â– tense with which it is endowed to evade its enemies the snake is about j two feet long and resembles a garter snake only it has no neck its head : seems to be on the thickest part of its body it has brown black stripes and specks on its sides and white bel ly if ynu know of any museum at tached to any of our colleges or in vanderbnilt university where they would like to have it and they will pay express charges on it i will send it to them let us hear frnm them right off ts i em't feed it well and i suppose it is getting hungry having heen a month or two laying up for winter address i'n r im i jackson aubnrndale poll county florida it will puzzle the court har.l'ord teh-ram ( hie of the most novel eases thai has ever occurred in the history of the courts i about to be brought in a tow u situated only a few miles from hurt ford six year ago a gentleman of re spectable character and whu moves in the hest society obtained a divorce i'rom his wile on the ground of adultly i'he case attracted wide attention tit the time on account of t lie re p â– : tbilih of the parti *- concerned although the divorce was granted the parents of the young woman have always maini tained thai theirdaughter was innocent and although the divorce to k from hei i iie right fo bear her husband's nam â– . they have . i ways iii isted thai sin could be known by no oi her less than a year ago the woman died it is s.ud of a broken heart and on her deathbed maintained that she had nev er in en guilty of the crime charged by her husband her body was laid away in the churchyard and a neat bin mod est gravestone mark's her resting place i fait ii i'n 1 to their belief the parents cans j ed the inscription on th â€¢ st me to bear | the name of their daughter's husband i and this h;is caused the suit the man is about to bring action in thecourt to i force the parents toeivase hi name from the touicstone claiming that i he was i divorced from the woman she had no â– right to bear his name even in | d ath it is doubtful if a similar case jean be found in anv state or f-ountry ts information sÂ£_$1_^Â£?%_s many persons y___^^^s t f "' s in 7 hhettmatism nsllslj^v-i^x -"'â– â€¢'â€¢'â– â– ''Â« the s2s1 ./ limbs hark nnd \. / si i,s bad ltlooil k jriiitli'./i-:tfit>ii.j)if c tprpsiii malar in , const i jirtt i uu js is id nvij t roubles j--v0lina cordial cures rheumatism bail blood anil ki inei tronilm by cleansing the bloo i of all i iiiiiiuritic -, sffonsthenlng all p-uu volina cordial cures sick-headache neuralgia tains in the limbs ba k and sides by toning the i . es i i trengthening the muscles volina cordial cures dyspepsia indi^r.=tic-m nnd constii at ion 1 j aiding 11 e assim ilating ofthe food hin ugh thej roper action of the itoinach ; it creates a healthy appetite h volina cordial cures nervousness depression r.f spirits and weakness by enliven j ing unci toning tiie fystem i â€” volina cordial cures overworked end delicate women puny and sickly children ! it is delightful and nutritious as a general ronic volina almanac and i'iary ***____&_ i for 1 â– ;*-::. - jb i and useful book tellinghowto ccre ttm vs diseases nl fiome iuapli tsant natural way i mailed en receipt of a2 . postage stamp address voljna druc a chemical co 1 baltimore md u.s a it is well to remember that lift withotit lungliingisailreaiy blank that ambition i i vacnuui tlmt will never be filled that oik mistake is a warnino winch ni'i'd not be rppeated that there is joy in the evening when the day has been well spent that cheek bodily outers where mod esty dare not pull tho door bell that xow is the constant watchword ticking from tli cluck of time that the wear and tear of life come chiefly by straining after the im possible that the great secret of success in life is to im ready when opportunity j gomes that i can't doit never did any thing and that i will try has wink ed wonders j that one broach of faith will til ways lie remembered no matter how loyal your subsequent life may he that a face that cannot smile is like a hud that bjossoms and dies upon the stalk that a watch sot right mav be a true guide to many others and one that i irons wrong may be the moans of mis leading a whole neighborhood that a well-cooked breakfast will do more towards preserving peace in tho family than scores of mottoes set in must elaborate mouldings what makes a man what makes the man is his charac ter and not his appearance nor any thing external the poet burns who w;is walking in edinburg with a fash ionable young man met and spoke too . : worthy but plainly dressed farmer i when his companion blamed him the i poet replied why it was not the rough coal that i spoke to bid the man thai was 1 in it and the man sir for true worth i would weigh down yoti and tne and \ ten more such anv dav . ' it is the character that makes the i man and the character i always being : shaped by tho daily thought and ac tions every boy is building up da by day the character that will make or mar his manhood exchange â€”an l v cook â€¢â€¢> aibaiij street the mass of corruption from my head boston highlands mass thai loss.of appetite dyspepsia and i w as troubled with catarrh and nil its emaciation totally unlitted me for 1 im httendrint evils for several vears iiii.il uess 1 tried many ol tin so-called sj - ., ,,,,,.. remedies and was treated bv cilies for this disease but obtained no ., number 0 f phvsieians but received relief until 1 commenced taking ami ,, , u il ,;, n ;| i commenced taking sarsaparilla after using two bottles of \- â€¢. - . . \ f,.\v b i 1 1 of this medicine i noticed an improvement thin medicine cured me of this trouble in mv condition when i had taken six â€ž, ,..,,. , | completely restored bottles all traces of catarrh disappeared ,â€ž, n ,. ; , , . r n_'th .(,.:â€žâ€¢ boggs aud my health was eompli tely restored hainan's mi :-. alb . marie n < '. a i < orm ii fairfield iowa f ym ,. inm â€ž,.,â€ž â€ž |( . n , md j nv j kora , e for thorowrhlv i radicating the poisons â– nur system more rapidly and surely than Â«. i ( atari h from the blood take b any othi r un divine use ayer's s:ir ayer's sar saparilla papnrilla it will restore health and visor it is the safesl mid mwt reliable of all to decaving ami diseased tissues when bl i purifiers no other remedi is so everything else fails effective incases of chronic catarrh prepared by dr j c ayer co , i owell ma sold bi ill druggibts price 1 ; eu boulen Â»Â»â€¢ â– - y ? â€” â€” am â€” f.r c flÂ«'w r ._ toba^s 1 i^a_ac^v"f m . â€”Â«___â€” | eczema eradicated 3 gentlemen it is dm â€¢ â– ' '' tl ii 'â€¢'. 1 ---â€¢.. â€¢ r -â€¢ i af â€¢ having i taken - . .'.â€¢-.. i â– ....... 1 ".' ml i 3i ae novel rei iirned s s s r â€¢ â– my and i ot well it â€¢ '-Â» 'â€¢"â– ":â€¢ 'â– â– mv wife greatly in caw ' - .-...â– ..- " â€¢ â€¢ '. cure of a breaking out on m i-ttl three i ..- < . . â€¢. . i . watkinsvillc i â– â€¢.., feb : :, 13 v jaaiiij \. . . l is l treatise on blooa and skin di eascmail d fr ta swiri srrnnrr r - ' v'tin'-i l b bbaaa>i.'iavijbffw!ujj jui.ti.imii a'm!Â»1"w*-Â«i u t > > â– â– â– â€”*.â€”â– â€”â€”â– â€”â– keel of it indicating the temperature and the darker the spots the i ohh r the weather it is claimed thai the marls dividing the bone indicate the time winter months 1 eenil er hegiui ing at the ir mt those who have read i his year's bone carefully say it indi cates more regular weather than that of last year and not so severe there will not lie many days during v hich running water will ir / â€¢. the cold est weather will occur during the first half of january and in thai time there wiil he several days of freezing it will be the severest part of the whole season near the pi ini of the bone , the discoloration is a little heavy thus showing that the first day of winter j will give proof of the season's change ! 1 his will be followed by rising temper hit ure and falling weather for christ ' nuts january will be ushered in with cold , and the cold will strengthen as the i days lengthen the coldest day of the winter being jan 8 the severe weath er will he brief followed by rising temperatures and heavy thaws and the last half of the month will see numv rains and snows during february there will not be any very cold weath er but it will be a rather disagreeable month with snows and rains a few cold days will he all that february will contribute to wittier an early and de cided thaw is among the promises of the bone the february thaw will overflow the mountain streams and disastrous floods may be looked for - a i w york tribune evangelical frauds columbia s c feb 24 ten days ago two men and a woman represent ing themselves as homeless evangelists from canada came here and began ureai hing upon the street corners the whites did not attend but several hun dred colored folks went to the preach ing and the meeting was quite excit ing the visitor at fi-rt preached religion m a fanatical manner abusing all pastors t churches and declaring that tiio.e who attended indoor servi ces were going to hell l'la world was to come to an end in a few years when all outdoor worshippers number ing one hundred and forty-four thous and would be taken to heaven alive the wih talks of these white people made some of the negroes almost wild with religious excitement it was ascertained to-day that these people are going about among the ne ; groes and ;.; tempting to set them against the white by assuring them | that i lie whites are leading them tinder foot usurping their rights cheating them v . the holiness evangelists should he threatened with a thrashing and tar and feathers if thev don't desist they have disappeared it is supposed that they are supported by some oi ganization in the noith desiring the colored people and the whites to disa gree they ask for no money and take none but draw on new york for large sums al a t ime